No one will have any secret
No one will tell any lie
Things that we’ve done in hiding
Are gonna reach to the highest sky
— Annie Herring, “No One Will Have a Secret”
A friend of mine almost died Sunday. He was just finishing work when he knew something wasn’t right. He drove to an emergency room, where he passed out as he had a heart attack.
Doctors told him later that he was clinically dead for at least two minutes — and the work to revive him went on for nine minutes before it was clear he would live. If he had been anywhere other than a hospital, he would have died.
My friend’s experience reminded me of some study I’ve been doing lately about people who go through “near-death experiences.” One of the common features I’ve heard from the people who describe such experiences is of being in a place where everybody knows what they have ever done or thought or said.
In many of these stories, the subjects say that the people to whom they had lied or hidden things in life were completely aware of everything. There were no secrets — and they found themselves experiencing the pain they caused for other people.
In the weeks since I first encountered these stories — some in books and some on YouTube videos — I’ve found myself wondering uncomfortably how I would feel if this is really true.
I’ve realized that I would be ashamed if you knew many of my secret thoughts.

I’ve lost all interest in begging anyone to fix the political system
Life-threatening accident for child puts my tiny problems into context
This is my new wife, Claire — but she doesn’t actually exist
Going through old relics tells me I’m still same person I used to be
Meet the new neighbors: Why rules aren’t always such a bad thing
Preview of 2012? Voter landslide in Colorado against new school taxes
Words on paper don’t give governments the right to rob us
Goodbye, Amelia (2000-2013)
Predictions of doom keep failing, so isn’t it rational to doubt them?